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The psychological impact of idiopathic scoliosis on the adolescent female. A preliminary multi-center study

Kahanovitz, N; Weiser, S
Seventy-two female idiopathic scoliosis patients, ages 12 to 16, who were receiving either no treatment/observation, the Scolitron, a brace, or who had undergone surgery were tested to determine the psychological impact of scoliosis. Mothers of the patients also served as subjects. A normal group of adolescents served as control subjects. Results showed that all groups were less likely to feel that their health status was due to chance than the controls. No other psychological differences were found between treatment groups, which contradicts previous reports of greater psychological distress among brace patients as compared with Scolitron (TM) patients. It was found that mothers' attitudes toward their children's illnesses were strongly and positively related to their children's attitudes toward their illnesses, and that these attitudes were strongly correlated with psychological distress. These findings underscore the need to consider the parent-child relationship when treating the adolescent patient
PMID: 2658124
ISSN: 0362-2436
CID: 67845

Existential orientation and adjustment to rheumatoid arthritis

Weiser-Horwitz, Sherri
[S.l. : s.n.], 1989
Extent: ix, 164 p.
ISBN: n/a
CID: 1215

Lateral electrical surface stimulation (LESS) compliance in adolescent female scoliosis patients

Kahanovitz, N; Weiser, S
This retrospective study of lateral electrical surface stimulation (LESS) treatment for patients with progressive idiopathic scoliosis was performed to document patient compliance in the standard electrical stimulation program and to gain objective data to perform a relative comparison of electrical stimulation and bracing compliance. Forty mothers of adolescent female patients participating in the electrical stimulation program of one of the authors (NK) were interviewed confidentially by an independent observer (SW). Patients whose compliance was rated good or total were thought to have acceptable compliance rates. Overall, 50% showed good or total compliance, 10% fair, 5% poor, and 35% failures. It appeared that the failures tended to exaggerate their symptoms and use 'skin irritation' as an excuse to discontinue treatment. The longer patients used the LESS (scolitron) device, the more compliant they became (P less than 0.0). This is opposite to the findings about brace compliance. Confidence of the mother in the device showed a positive correlation (P less than 0.008) with compliance, and a mother's concern of how others would react to her child's scoliosis had a negative correlation (P less than 0.003). From the results of this study, overall compliance appears to be somewhat better for electrical stimulation programs than for bracing programs. However, the high failure rate was both disappointing and surprising
PMID: 3491431
ISSN: 0362-2436
CID: 67846